Guardians of the Wild: Conservation Volunteering

Most of us want to help, we just don’t want to turn our lives upside down to do it. That’s where community volunteering works so well. It’s local, it’s practical, and it can fit around a job, caring, or just being tired by Friday.
Picture something small and real. One hour a week at a food bank, helping sort donations or pack parcels. You show up, you do the job, you go home. Yet that single hour can steady someone else’s week.
Local volunteering helps your area run better, but it also helps you. It can bring a sense of belonging, a bit more confidence, and new skills that don’t feel like “self-improvement”. It just feels like turning up.
TCV (The Conservation Volunteers) is England’s charity where volunteers spend weekends planting trees, clearing paths, picking up rubbish, building hedges, stiles and dry-stone walls, restoring pathways – and handing out cuppas to new friends!
All the volunteer projects are supported by trained leaders, with safety briefings sand tools/protective clothing. It’s a great way to spend your free time, get fit, make new friends and make a difference!
CRB checks apply for ex-offenders and volunteering officers who work with vulnerable people.
There are also ‘Green Gyms’ which have warm-ups and cool-downs’, as alternatives to expensive gyms with sweaty people on machines!
Just enter your postcode to find upcoming projects to join in with. You also get to learn new skills, which could even set you off on a new career path!
If planting green spaces, read up on pet-friendly gardens and wildlife-friendly gardens. If planting trees, know of trees to avoid near horses (including yew, oak and sycamore).
I take three buses to be able to join the group I love it so much. The community spirit, the ability to get together with friends and be in nature makes it more than worth the trip. TCV Volunteer
Typical TCV Volunteering Opportunities
We typed in an example London postcode, and the site came up with the following opportunities, to give you an idea of what needs doing!
- Restoring marsh pools to create dragonfly habitats
- Marshland restoration in North London
- Planting a nature garden for a Haringey school
- Building raised beds to grow food (Green Gym)
- Planting wildflower meadows in Leyton (Green Gym)
Free Trees for Communities and Schools!
I Dig Trees is a project of TCV, which hands out native tree packs to communities, who wish to restore woodlands and wildlife habitats. Whether you want to plant a pocket forest or plant trees to attract more pollinators, there’s a pack for you!
The trees must be planted on publicly accessible land (not on private domestic property). It also provides pack for schools to plant fruit orchards.
More Tree Planting Volunteer Ideas
Planting native trees and shrubs supports wildlife, helps improve air quality, and creates new habitats for birds and insects. Many groups host autumn and winter planting sessions. Habitat restoration can also mean clearing scrub, sowing wildflowers, or repairing damaged areas.
- Trees for Cities gets people involved in planting trees on streets and in urban areas, use the app to check if your council is signed up, then choose a park or street.
- The Orchard Project has nationwide volunteers to plant (and care for) trees to provide free fruit and nuts for communities. This restores veteran orchards, and creates wildlife habitats.
- Incredible Edible began in Yorkshire, and is now a worldwide movement to grow free food for communities: trees, herbs at railway stations and vegetable gardens in schools).
Volunteer to Clean Up England’s Canals

By the waterside, you can volunteer as part of the Towpath Taskforce with Canal & River Trust to help restore historic canals.
From lock-painting to hedge-planting or simply clearing litter and weeding gardens, the taskforce leader will run through what’s to be done, assign tasks and demonstrate safe use of equipment.
Keep dogs on leads near canals (especially near ducks) and likewise children, as banks are steep. Don’t swim in canals, rivers carry disease.
Read More on Conservation Volunteering
Wild Service: Why Nature Needs You is a rallying call to the new army of nature’s defenders. So whether you live in the countryside or city, and want to protect your local river (or save native flora) this is your invite to rediscover the power in participation – the sacred in the service.
Volunteer for The GoodGym Community
GoodGym is a nationwide community of almost 25,000 volunteers (the no-contract optional £7 donation uses profits to help isolated older people).
Members are profiled online, so adjust the privacy options, to avoid your profile being public, if wished.
Examples of ‘fitness tasks’ carried out are:
- Planting trees in local parks
- Cleaning up community centres
- Volunteer gardening
- Helping older people with home maintenance
- Sorting cans in food banks
Community Gardening: Growing Veg
Spending a morning planting and weeding in a community garden is hard work. You use muscles often missed in normal routines, like your back, arms and legs.
No-dig gardening is also calming and you see the results of your work. Fresh air, teamwork and a shared meal after make this a standout volunteering choice.
